The 2025 Residential Power Rate Increase in Idaho with Adam Richins
Adam Richins is the Chief Operating Office for Idaho Power and came in to speak about the rate case it is currently undergoingΒ ...
Senior Vice President & Chief Operating Officer of Idaho Power, Idacorp
Search every verified Adam Richins interview, podcast appearance, and on-the-record quote β each transcript cross-checked by AI and human review to confirm speaker identity. Adam Richins, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of Idaho Power, discussed the company's 2025 residential power rate increase request in an August 2025 interview. He stated that Idaho Power is seeking a 13% global rate increase, with residential customers potentially seeing around a 17% increase, but noted that this has not been approved by the public utility commission and remains under review. Richins said the request includes investments in infrastructure and new generation resources to meet about 3% demand growth from residential and large business customers. He also said that contrary to popular belief, the residential increase is not subsidizing data centers or large customers like Micron or Meta, as those customers pay directly for their infrastructure under a "growth pays for growth" policy. Richins attributed the need for the rate increase to rising costs, including a more than 400% increase in transformer prices, a 218% increase in underground conductor costs, and a 250% increase in gas turbines, along with higher labor and insurance costs. He noted that Idaho Power has increased annual spending on vegetation management from $10 million to $40 million for wildfire mitigation, and that insurance costs have quadrupled. Richins said Idaho Power's rates remain 20 to 30% below the national average, with total rate increases over the past 10 to 11 years at 13%, well below CPI inflation of 35%. He acknowledged that there is no perfect balance between reliability and cost, and that the company aims to find a middle ground among reliability, affordability, and environmental concerns.
“Idaho Power is not seeking a 16 to 17% rate increase. That has not been approved by the public utility commission. What is happening is a 13% global increase request, with residential customers potentially seeing around 17%, but this is still under review and not finalized.”
“Our rates are 20 to 30% below the national average depending on the rate class, and over the last 10 to 11 years, total rate increases have been 13%, while CPI inflation was 35%, showing that rate growth has been well below inflation.”
“The rate increase request includes investments in infrastructure and new generation resources to keep up with about 3% growth in demand, including residential and large business growth, which requires building new infrastructure.”
“Idaho Power operates in a competitive energy market where it must buy the cheapest power available, even if that means not using its own gas generation assets, which can reduce the rate of return on those investments.”
Adam Richins is the Chief Operating Office for Idaho Power and came in to speak about the rate case it is currently undergoingΒ ...
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